X-Git-Url: http://gitweb.fperrin.net/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=testdata%2Fgoldens%2FSingleLang_EN.quickdic.text;h=50963bc9a0e799215043082d475f7447b989ec36;hb=58fd4402729f38bf4408e8fef487a9bc359e45a0;hp=3e884092a662e1c4eb00ae7f8cb502c0baf4dc9a;hpb=3bf8c5424c20dbb0e7219876f8699145f0e6db21;p=DictionaryPC.git
diff --git a/testdata/goldens/SingleLang_EN.quickdic.text b/testdata/goldens/SingleLang_EN.quickdic.text
index 3e88409..50963bc 100644
--- a/testdata/goldens/SingleLang_EN.quickdic.text
+++ b/testdata/goldens/SingleLang_EN.quickdic.text
@@ -866,7 +866,7 @@ See also HtmlEntry:eagle
***brown***
HtmlEntry: brown <<<Various shades of brown.Brown is a common hair color.A glass of hot chocolate.
Etymology
-From lang:enm broun, from lang:ang brun ("dark, shining"), from lang:gem-pro {{recons|brūnaz|lang=gem-pro}} (compare lang:fy brún, Dutch bruin, German braun), from lang:ine-pro {{recons|bʰruHnos|lang=ine-pro}} (compare Ancient Greek brown (phrýnē), brown (phrŷnos, "toad")), enlargement of {{recons|bʰrew-|shiny, brown|lang=ine-pro}} (compare Lithuanian beras ("brown"), Sanskrit brown (babhrú, "reddish-brown") {{rfscript|Devanagari|lang=sa}}).
+From lang:enm broun, from lang:ang brun ("dark, shining"), from lang:gem-pro {{recons|brūnaz|lang=gem-pro}} (compare lang:fy brún, Dutch bruin, German braun), from lang:ine-pro {{recons|bʰruHnos|lang=ine-pro}} (compare Ancient Greek brown (phrýnē), brown (phrŷnos, "toad")), enlargement of {{recons|bʰrew-|shiny, brown|lang=ine-pro}} (compare Lithuanian beras ("brown"), Sanskrit brown (babhrú, "reddish-brown") Devanagari).
Pronunciation
- IPA: /braʊn/, {{X-SAMPA|/braUn/}}
- {{audio|en-us-brown.ogg|Audio (US)}}
@@ -7045,7 +7045,7 @@ HtmlEntry: word <<<
Etymology
From lang:gem-pro {{recons|wurdan|lang=gem-pro}}, from lang:ine-pro {{recons|werdʰo-|word|lang=ine-pro}}, from lang:ine-pro {{recons|wer-|speak|lang=ine-pro}}; cognate with Old Frisian word, Old Saxon word (Dutch woord), Old High German wort (German Wort), Old Norse orð (Icelandic orð, Swedish ord), Gothic 𐍅𐌰𐌿 (waurd). The Proto-Indo-European root is also the source of Latin verbum, Lithuanian vardas, and, more distantly, of Ancient Greek εἴρω (eirō, "I say") and Old Slavonic rotiti sę ("to swear") (Russian ротиться (rotit’cja, "to vow")).
Pronunciation
-- {{IPA|/word/|lang=ang}}
+
Noun